I want to push and syncronize my code in two different remote repository, to Gitlab and Github at the same command, is it possible?
2 Answers
Yes. Just define two remotes for your working copy:
git remote add lab https://gitlab.com/...
git remote add hub https://github.com/...
Push takes a repository as a parameter:
git push lab master
git push hub master
-
2For a single line
git push lab master;git push hub master
:) Commented Apr 30, 2019 at 18:00 -
1Or even
for repo in $(git remote) ; do git push "$repo" master ; done
...– chorobaCommented Apr 30, 2019 at 18:14 -
If you have more than 2 remotes that could screw you. Altho you should only have permission to push to those 2 remotes. Commented Apr 30, 2019 at 18:18
Let's me recommend this push-to-all-remotes
alias:
git config [--global] alias.push-to-all-remotes '!git remote | xargs -I% -n1 git push %'
Usage: git push-to-all-remotes master
.
Taken from gitalias.com (full disclosure: I'm a contributor there).
git push --mirror
to the mirror periodically.